Question 1 Indian Removal A.) The Indian Removal Act was passed in 1830 authorizing Andrew Jackson on negotiating land-exchange treaties with tribes living East of Mississippi. The Treaties were often enacted under the act’s provisions emigrating ten of thousands of American Indians to the West. B.) One type of Indian Resistance was the order removal of Indian Tribes residing East of the Mississippi newly to established Indian Territory West of Arkansas and Missouri, and another resistance was that those resisting eviction forcibly removed by American forces oftenly after the prolonged of the legal and military battles. C.) Question 2 Nat Turner Rebellion/slave treatment/life A.) Nat Turner was a slave from Virginia that led groups …show more content…
B.) One other fact about the Lowell Factory System was that there were Lowell Factory girls involved in this system. Their job were usually them chaperoning boarding houses, and the women were less likely to pay for same work, and the unmarried women were only for money needs and domestic duty distractions. C.) Question 5 The Second Great Awakening A.) The Second Great Awakening was one of the most significant occurrences in the history of American Religion. During the 1800’s, much reform began to form and develop through advancements in religion, education, literature, and society. The Second Great Awakening occurred in South-Central …show more content…
C.) A second reform that associated with the Second Great Awakening was that many people were converted and many churches were changed and revived. This didn’t only affect religion, but it also influence movement such as prison reform. Question 6 Hamilton 's Financial Plan A.) One example of Hamilton’s Financial plan with dealing with the the nation’s debt was protecting the tariffs which was based on importing foreign goods to protect American industries from foreign competition. B.) As second financial plan that Hamilton dealt with was whiskey tax which was used to propose a tax to raise money from Western farmers who largely paid no taxes to the federal government. C.) One benefit to this plan were for taxes to be imported on goods in which why protecting the tariffs was a good thing in this financial plan, and that’s what helped this plan for importing the foreign goods. Question 7 Seneca Falls A.) The Declaration of Sentiments was a document signed by majority of people which presented at the Seneca Falls Convention. This was based upon the Declaration of
Woody Holton illustrates in his book, Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia, how minority groups had a powerful impact on the Revolutionary cause . He claims that these non-elite groups “helped propel free Virginians into the Independence movement,” specifically from 1763 to 1776 (Holton xviii). In other words, Holton emphasizes how minority groups with less power, such as “Indians, merchants, slaves, and debtors,” affected the majority groups (xvii, xviii). These non-elites ultimately helped to spread the Revolutionary cause within Virginia. Throughout his text, Holton explains three ways this influence operated.
Washington’s administration was the part of his first leadership and management of the U.S government and they would be the people working with George Washington during his presidency. b) Precedents were, “acts or statements that became traditions to be followed,” and George Washington placed them to be followed by the administration so there would be order and it would set clear cut rules for the administration. c) The Cabinet was the most important precedent that Washington created. The Cabinet was a group of federal leaders who worked in specific departments of government that Washington assigned them to do.
Many Americans became complacent in their ways of worship so they began to break away from the strict and harsh ways of the English church in order to form their own ways of prayer and worship. The people wanted to practice religion in a way that made them feel a more intimate bond with the Lord. The Great Awakening most definitely influenced the fabrication of this new country’s documents such as The Declaration of Independence. However, the Awakening’s greatest significance was in the way that it prepared the American colonist for their war against the British in the fight for their freedom during the American Revolution. The revivalism of the Great Awakening taught the people that they could stand up for what they believed in when it came to the religious authorities and that when the churches were not living up to the expectations of the colonist, they could tear away from the church and form new ones that complied with what they wanted.
The Indian Removal Act was signed in 1830 by President Andrew Jackson to remove the Cherokee Indians from their homes and force them to settle west of the Mississippi River. The act was passed in hopes to gain agrarian land that would replenish the cotton industry which had plummeted after the Panic of 1819. Andrew Jackson believed that effectively forcing the Cherokees to become more civilized and to christianize them would be beneficial to them. Therefore, he thought the journey westward was necessary. In late 1838, the Cherokees were removed from their homes and forced into a brutal journey westward in the bitter cold.
The dispersing of the Indians, particularly the five civilized tribes of the southwest: Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminole fairly began before the approval of the Indian Removal Act. As the European-Americans were progressing the procedure of passing the Act was bound to happen. They were once a secluded society and now forced to a loss of war. The Indian Removal Act was signed on 1830 by President Andrew Jackson. The act allowed President Andrew Jackson to provide the states with federal funds to remove the civilized tribes and reject the Indians from letting them to be part of the European-American society.
The Indian Removal Act authorized Jackson to give the Indians land west of the Mississippi in exchange for their land in the states, but could not force them to leave. He violated and broke commitments that he even negotiated with them. He tried to bribe the Indians and even threatened some of them. Alfred Cave organizes his article thematically and is trying to prove
The Indian Removal Act is an important event in the development of early U.S. history, and continues to have a lasting impact on our world today. The Indian Removal Act affected the land Americans had access to. It changed the culture of Native Americans tribes nearby and relocated them off their sacred land. Americans then took this opportunity to move West beyond the Appalachian Mountain and into the fertile land to start more farms that made the Us economy even better. This is because the main economy in the US at the time was agriculture.
This first seminar was successful due to the insightful comments and output every person brought when conveying our thoughts on Jackson’s actions and the Indian Removal Act. The inception of the seminar began with Maria straight out stating how Andrew Jackson was to blame and he het congress enact the bill. This was the center of our conversation for a good 15 minutes before we switched to examine why Andrew Jackson may have been forced and obligated to enact the Indian Removal Act. Sam discussed how Andrew Jackson had to “ultimately choose,” between his own citizens and the Native Americans. And he was not the only one that wanted this Act, but a majority in congress supported it, which is the reason it passed.
This historic event was nothing short of ethnic cleansing, a disgusting and hateful act. After the passage of the Indian Removal Act, Jackson proceeded to disregard the rules of his own proposal:
The Indian Removal Act was passed during Andrew Jackson’s presidency on May 28, 1830. This authorized the president to grant land that was west of the Mississippi River to Indians that agreed to give up their homeland. They believed that the land could be more profitably farmed by non-Indians.
The Second Great Awakening was like the first, a religious renewal for protestant churches in the United States. The Second Great Awakening opened open doors for many reform movements. Two movements influenced by the Second Great Awakening the temperance and abolitionist movement. The temperance movement was a social movement that capitalized the personal moderation drinking of alcohol. The abolitionist was the abolishment of slaver.
On July 17, 1830, the Cherokee nation published an appeal to all of the American people. United States government paid little thought to the Native Americans’ previous letters of their concerns. It came to the point where they turned to the everyday people to help them. They were desperate. Their withdrawal of their homeland was being caused by Andrew Jackson signing the Indian Removal Act into law on May 28, 1830.
The Great Awakening and colonial forms of government provided the context for the roots of democracy in the colonial society. The Great Awakening provided a revival of religion and brought people together. The colonial forms of government provided a stepping stone for them to learn how to be political in their colonies. The Great Awakening provided an opening for new ideas.
Enlightenment and Great Awakening In America, as the society aged, it was influenced by two cultural phenomena. One was based on intellectual while the other was religion. As the 1700s advanced, American treasure improved, the wealthy spend their money on books. They were exposed to new ideas coming from Europe. On the other hand, the Great Awakening appealed to the less wealthy because it was for people’s emotions.
The Genocide: Trail of Tears/ The Indian removal act During the 1830s the united states congress and president Andrew Jackson created and passed the “Indian removal act”. Which allowed Jackson to forcibly remove the Indians from their native lands in the southeastern states, such as Florida and Mississippi, and send them to specific “Indian reservations” across the Mississippi river, so the whites could take over their land. From 1830-1839 the five civilized tribes (The Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, and Chickasaw) were forced, sometimes by gun point, to march about 1,000 miles to what is present day Oklahoma.